<h2>CHAPTER XVII.</h2>
<div class='chaptertitle'>THE ROUND-UP.<br/><br/></div>
<div class='cap'>JUST after dawn, Olive stole softly into
Jack's and Jean's bedrooms. Jean was
asleep. But Jack's place was empty. On her
pillow was a sheet of paper addressed to
"Miss Ruth Drew."</div>
<p>Olive alone of the group before the living-room
fire in the evening just past, had realized
that Jack had no idea of giving up her
intention.</p>
<p>Olive slipped quickly into her clothes,
determined to follow her friend. She was
unusually timid, but she knew that Jack must
not go alone among the wild cattle and the
strange men who gathered at the autumn
round-up. The girl had little knowledge of
what a round-up was like but knew that the
Indians often went to it and camped about on
the outskirts of the plains to enjoy the racing
and sports that usually closed the day's
work.</p>
<p>Jack must have had about a half hour's
start of Olive. She rode as fast as she could<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</SPAN></span>
tear for the first few miles of the way, knowing
that Jim had started several hours before.
Their cowboys had been off over the plains for
two days searching for their stray cattle and
herding them into the great open field selected
for the round-up. There was no one to follow
her and Jack slowed down. Then her heart
began to fail her the least little bit, for she
supposed everybody at the ranch would be
furious with her for her disobedience.</p>
<p>Jack heard another horse coming along the
trail behind her. Her repentance vanished,
for she presumed Miss Drew had sent some one
to bring her ignominiously back home.</p>
<p>"Jack, Jack," Olive's gentle voice called.
"Won't you please slow down a little? Your
horse is faster than mine and my poor beast
is tired already."</p>
<p>Jacqueline waited, but she stared at Olive
reproachfully. "I did not think you would
come to try to make me go back home, Olive,"
Jack exclaimed. "I thought you knew that
when I said I intended to do a thing, I would
do it, in spite of all the Miss Ruth Drews and
Mr. Jim Colters in the world."</p>
<p>Olive knew that Jack was behaving abominably
but she could not help feeling the deepest<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</SPAN></span>
admiration for her. To Olive, Jack's
courage and high spirit were glorious. Olive
was so shy and frightened; she had borne so
much ill treatment from the time she was a
little girl that her nature was almost crushed
and she could only contend with people when
she was driven to the last limit of patience.
But when Olive made up her mind to a step,
she had the Indian's power of endurance.</p>
<p>"I only came to go along to the round-up
with you, Jack," Olive replied quietly.</p>
<p>Jack flushed. She was fairly sure of being
able to bear her own burdens, but she did
hate getting other people into trouble. "You
are awfully sweet, Olive dear, but do go back
home," Jack urged. "Jim and Cousin Ruth
will both be furiously angry with us and there
is no reason why you should have any of the
blame. You know you will hate this old
round-up and be dreadfully frightened, and
that you are only coming on my account."</p>
<p>Olive shook her head. "Never mind, Jack,"
she answered, "I have come with you now
so I would have to get my share of the scolding
and I am not going to have you go to
that place alone." Olive kept her horse
just behind Jack's and the two girls rode<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</SPAN></span>
for a short time in silence. By and by Jack
sighed.</p>
<p>"What's the matter, Jack?" Olive asked
quickly.</p>
<p>Jack laughed wickedly. "Oh, it is not
that I have repented of my evil deed, Olive,"
she returned. "It is only that I am so dreadfully
hungry. I sneaked off this morning
without a bit of food. I know we can get
some lunch at the mess-wagons, or perhaps
we may find some one we know at the round-up.
But the question with me is, how am I
ever going to live until then?"</p>
<p>Olive silently produced two rolls with
slices of bacon between them.</p>
<p>"I stole them on my way to the stable,"
she announced happily. "I knew you hadn't
eaten anything and I didn't dare to wait."</p>
<p>The two girls ate their outdoor breakfast
ravenously, for both were enjoying their
morning ride. It was cold, but they wore
heavy sweaters and corduroy riding skirts
and besides, the swift ride had sent the warm
blood tingling through them. Jack was in
brown and Olive in green, the color Jack
liked best for her. The sun had just risen
and there was a faint rose glow over the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</SPAN></span>
bare prairies, and in the distance the girls
spied a few coyotes racing along over the hard
ground in search of their breakfast, but for
miles and miles there was no sign of human
life.</p>
<p>Finally the girls rode up to a pair of tents
set up within no great distance of the plain
chosen for the round-up. There was a fire
near one of them, but the girls saw no people
about and decided that they must have been
used by the cowboys for their sleeping quarters
at night.</p>
<p>Olive brought her pony closer to Jack's.</p>
<p>"Don't be nervous, Olive," said Jack
reassuringly. "I expect the round-up is a
pretty wild business, but we won't go near
enough to get into trouble and you must be
sure to stay close to me. I shall try to see
some one to ask about our cattle and then we
will start right back home. We will be sure
to be at Rainbow Lodge by night."</p>
<p>Away off in the distance, the girls soon saw
a great swirling cloud of grey dust, rising
over the yellow plain. They could distinguish
an enormous mass of moving objects
and hear a far hollow roaring and bellowing
of men and animals. To the left, across a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</SPAN></span>
diagonal trail, Jack saw a dark line of wagons
at some distance from the round-up. She
knew they were the mess-wagons and carriages
of the ranchmen, who came over to superintend
the branding of their cattle. If the
ranchmen happened to live near the scene of
the round-up their wives and families sometimes
drove over to spend a few hours, but
the women were careful not to go near the
frightened animals and returned home before
night.</p>
<p>The two girls moved slowly along this trail.</p>
<p>Jack's eyes were dancing and her cheeks
were glowing with excitement. She dearly
loved this typical western scene and its noise
and savagery did not frighten her. It was a
part of the business of the cattlemen to which
she had always been accustomed. She was
sorry of course that the poor animals had to be
burned with the brands of their owners, but
since the cattle ranged together through vast
tracts of land, she knew of no other way by
which one ranchman could distinguish his
cattle from another's. Jack had been careful
never to witness the branding, but she had
often seen the cowboys driving the herds
across the plains.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>But Olive did not feel so cheerful. The
distant noise and the surging crowd alarmed
her. She wished that she and Jack were safe
at home.</p>
<p>Coming at full speed down the trail toward
them, the two girls spied two cowboys wearing
the full cowboy regalia, leather suits with
fringed trousers and immense sombrero hats,
tied under their chins.</p>
<p>"Great Scott!" cried a familiar voice.
"Here come Jack Ralston and her Indian
girl! What a place for a couple of girls to
be alone!"</p>
<p>Jack's ears burned. She recognized Dan's
tones but was not so much abashed by meeting
him, as she was by Frank Kent's astonished
face. The young English fellow's surprise
was unmistakable.</p>
<p>"May I stay with you until your escort
joins you, Miss Ralston?" Frank asked immediately.
"The men about here are pretty
rough and if you should happen to get too
near the cattle it might be dangerous. I am
told they sometimes break out and start a
stampede."</p>
<p>Jack kept her face turned away while
Frank was speaking. She was actually<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</SPAN></span>
ashamed to return his friendly gaze. Frank
had entirely separated himself from Dan
Norton, who was grinning scornfully at Olive
and Jack.</p>
<p>"Please don't worry about us, Mr. Kent,"
Jack said quietly. "We won't get into danger.
I don't exactly like to tell you, but we rode
over to the round-up by ourselves. You
understand that we didn't mean to go near
the men or the cattle, but I thought we might
find some one we knew near the mess-wagons."</p>
<p>"Come on, Frank Kent," Dan Norton yelled
impatiently. "Do you think I have got time
to waste while you talk to Jack Ralston all
day? I told Laura we would be back with
them in half an hour. Hustle."</p>
<p>Frank Kent's face was no longer pale, as it
had been when Jack had her first meeting
with him on the Ralston Ranch. It had been
tanned and reddened by his weeks in the sun
and air of Wyoming, but that did not account
for the sudden color that flamed in it.
"Be quiet, Dan, you cad," he ordered sharply.
"Go when you like, I shall stay with Miss
Ralston and her friend."</p>
<p>"I say, Miss Ralston," Frank suggested
suddenly. "Mr. and Mrs. Simpson are not<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</SPAN></span>
very far away. They came over in their
automobile, because Mrs. Simpson thought
maybe her sister and niece would like to see
the cowboys from the different ranches ride
up to their work. Gee, they are stunning-looking
fellows, aren't they? I wish I were
an artist, I would like to paint them. Won't
you come over to Mrs. Simpson with me?
They are well out of any danger and I know
Mrs. Simpson would want you and Miss Olive
to join her."</p>
<p>An unregenerate twinkle returned to Jack's
eyes. "To tell you the truth, Mr. Kent, I
would like awfully to go over and stay with
Aunt Sallie. Olive and I feel very strange
here alone, but the fact is I deliberately ran
away from home to come to the round-up
and Olive rode along to protect me. I am
ashamed to confess my sin to Mrs. Simpson."</p>
<p>"Nevertheless you had better come,"
Frank urged, and for once, Jack yielded to
another will.</p>
<p>It might have been wiser to have turned
back home than to have faced Aunt Sallie
and her Eastern relatives, but Jack and
Olive could not have ridden to Rainbow
Lodge without having something more to eat.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</SPAN></span>
Olive already seemed exhausted. She was
quite pale and scarcely lifted her eyes. Jack
knew that Olive hated to meet the members
of the house party, whom she had not seen
since the time when she was rescued from
being Miss Laura Post's maid.</p>
<p>"Jack Ralston, the most unlikely place in
the world is the most likely place to find you,"
Mrs. Simpson exclaimed laughingly, as Frank
and the two newcomers rode up to her big
touring car. "What in the world are you
girls doing here?"</p>
<p>"Shall I tell the whole truth and nothing
but the truth, Aunt Sallie?" Jack demanded,
smiling at Mrs. Simpson and bowing to Mrs.
Post, Laura and Mr. Simpson. Mrs. Post
put up her lorgnettes, as though she were in
a box at the opera, to gaze at these extraordinary girls.
Their clothes were dusty and
their hair showed the effects of their long,
morning ride, but turning, Mrs. Post beheld
her beloved Laura swathed in a pale pink
motor veil and a long fur coat, and breathed
a sigh of admiration and relief. Surely her
Laura was not in the least like these Western
tomboys!</p>
<p>Mrs. Simpson shrugged her handsome<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</SPAN></span>
shoulders. "Well, you usually tell the truth,
whatever else you do and don't do, Jack,"
Mrs. Simpson avowed. "I know you have
run off, so just stay here and have lunch
with me."</p>
<p>Mrs. Simpson was talking to Jack, but she
was really interested in Olive. How the girl
had changed, in the few weeks since she had
seen her: she had always been pretty, but
she had lost her look of fear. Her grace and
quiet manner showed beyond a doubt that
from some source she had a heritage of gentle
blood. Mr. and Mrs. Simpson shook hands
with Olive very kindly, but Mrs. Post and
Laura utterly ignored her. Olive showed no
resentment, but Jack was exceedingly provoked.</p>
<p>The girls dismounted and climbed into the
automobile. Now and then groups of cowboys
would pass by them, jingling their spurs
and joking with one another. Olive recognized
a number of Indian boys, who had
lived in the Indian village, where she had
been brought up. Among them, she thought
she saw old Laska's son and her supposed
brother, Josef.</p>
<p>Mrs. Simpson was worried over Dan's<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</SPAN></span>
return to their party. She and Mr. Simpson,
and indeed all the ranchmen in the neighborhood,
now knew of Mr. Daniel Norton's claim
to the ownership of Rainbow Ranch, and his
efforts to get it away from the ranch girls.
Most of the neighbors deeply sympathized
with the Ralston girls. Mrs. Simpson dreaded
a meeting between Jack and Dan. She
knew they were open enemies and hated each
other very sincerely.</p>
<p>But when Dan joined them, Jack showed no
trace of ill feeling. She had thought matters
over and decided that good manners compelled
her to behave as naturally as possible.
She had no right to continue a quarrel, when
she and Dan were both guests.</p>
<p>Dan Norton was in no such humor. He
was furious with Frank for having brought
Jack and Olive to Mrs. Simpson, and he was
determined to get even with Jack, if he possibly
could, for Jim's treatment of him at
their last meeting.</p>
<p>Mrs. Simpson had an early lunch, since they
meant to return to their ranch in a short time.
The tablecloth was spread out on the ground,
and unconsciously she placed Laura and Dan
next Olive, who made no effort to speak to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[214]</SPAN></span>
them. But Dan whispered something to
Laura, immediately they got up and marching
to the other end of the line of guests, sat
down directly opposite Jack and Frank.</p>
<p>Nobody had much to say. To save her
life, Jack could not talk naturally with Dan's
sneering face across from her. Mr. and Mrs
Simpson did their best, but the luncheon party
was a failure.</p>
<p>Dan was awaiting his opportunity.</p>
<p>"Jack," Mr. Simpson remarked innocently,
"Jim Colter tells me that you have recently
been losing some of your cattle and young
colts. He says that they disappear from your
ranch, and when they are seen again they
have the brand of another owner on them.
That is a pretty bad business. Have you
any idea who is responsible for the trouble?"</p>
<p>Jack shook her head desperately. She was
determined to say nothing that could make
any trouble. "No, Mr. Simpson, we don't
know. That is, it don't make any difference.
Perhaps we are mistaken," she answered
lamely.</p>
<p>Mr. Simpson was puzzled by Jack's manner.
There was an awkward silence.</p>
<p>Dan leaned over and whispered to Laura in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[215]</SPAN></span>
a tone that could be distinctly heard, not only
by Jack and Frank, but by every member of
the small company. "I shouldn't think Jack
Ralston would worry about losing a few of her
old cattle. She is going to lose something else
pretty soon, that is a good deal more important."</p>
<p>Laura snickered nervously. She caught
sight of Jack's face.</p>
<p>Mrs. Simpson frowned and glanced hastily
at Jack. Mr. Simpson's eyes flashed and he
too watched his young girl guest. Jack was
distinctly conscious that everybody in the
party stared straight at her when Dan ended
his insulting speech.</p>
<p>Jack felt herself turn cold all over. Only
her face was scorching hot. Half a dozen
angry retorts trembled on her lips. She
started to speak, but then she turned to
Frank and said quietly. "Won't you tell
me something more about your home in
England? I am awfully interested."</p>
<p>Mrs. Simpson breathed a sigh of relief.
Only Laura seemed disappointed. There was
nothing she loved half so well as a scene and
she fondly believed Dan and Jack meant to
treat her to one.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Ten minutes later, Jack went over to Mrs.
Simpson. "Aunt Sallie, I think Olive and I
had better start back to the ranch now. You
were awfully good to give us our luncheon,
but we ought to be at home by dark."</p>
<p>Mrs. Simpson caught Jack's hand. "You
were a trump, Jack dear," she whispered.
"I would like to shake that red-headed boy
if I had a chance at him, but I believe somebody
else will when you go."</p>
<p>Jack smiled, though her voice trembled a
little. "I don't think Dan and I ought to
carry on our quarrels at your table, Aunt
Sallie," she answered. "But you know if
he says anything like that to me again, I
should die if I didn't answer him back. So,
good-bye."</p>
<p>Jacqueline bowed her farewells and she and
Olive started toward their ponies.</p>
<p>Frank Kent had a moment alone with Dan.</p>
<p>"Dan Norton, you have got to settle with
me for that speech, you cub," he insisted, in a
white passion of anger that startled his host.</p>
<p>Dan thought Frank too much of a gentleman
to be willing to fight.</p>
<p>"All right," he rejoined calmly, "choose
your own time."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[217]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Half way over to their horses, Frank joined
Olive and Jack.</p>
<p>"I am going to ride back to your ranch with
you, Miss Ralston," Frank announced quietly.</p>
<p>Olive looked relieved, but Jack shook her
head firmly.</p>
<p>"You are awfully good, Mr. Kent," Jack
protested. "But really Olive and I can go
home perfectly well alone. We would rather
not trouble you."</p>
<p>Frank assisted Olive on her broncho and
then climbed into his own saddle, Jack being
already mounted.</p>
<p>"Mr. Simpson thinks I had better go home
with you," Frank repeated carelessly. "And
I think you might let me act as an honorary
escort, because in case you don't I shall simply
ride along behind you."</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[218]</SPAN></span></p>
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